Unemployment as a New Form of Work
by Barbara EhrenreichLink to article
This appeared originally in the LA Times on May 3, 2009.
In most parts of the world, from Paris to Beijing, mass unemployment brings the specter of mass social unrest. Not here, though, where 13 million people have accepted joblessness with nary a peep of protest.
Many reasons — from Prozac to Pentecostalism — have been cited to explain American passivity in the face of economic violence. But the truth may be far simpler: In America, being unemployed doesn’t mean you have nothing to do but run around burning police cars. Unemployment has been reconfigured as a new form of work.
Nowhere is this clearer than in the white-collar world, where the laid-off are constantly advised to see job searching as a full-time job. As business self-help guru Harvey Mackay advises: “Once you’re fired, you already have a job. The job you have is tougher than the last one. It’s more demanding.” How demanding? He says you need to “plan on 12 to 16 hours a day.”
Picture it: People across America rising at the usual time, suiting up in full corporate regalia and setting themselves down at their laptops to fiddle with resumes, peruse Monster.com and pester everyone on their address lists for leads.
Some people have no doubt found jobs in this manner, but there have been no scientific comparisons of the technique with, say, printing a resume on a sandwich board and parading around Times Square.
If there is something familiar in the image of laid-off workers soldiering on, it may be because of films like “Tokyo Sonata” and the 2002 French film, “Time Out,” in which the heroes — laid-off executives — conceal their status from their families and continue to mime the daily commute to work. In the movies, this behavior seems pathetic — a case of terminal denial — but it’s exactly what the American “transition industry” of career coaches and outplacement firms recommends: If you don’t have a job, fake one.
In real life, it’s OK for a man to tell his wife he’s lost his job; he should just never reveal that he has time on his hands. A February article in the New York Times featured a laid-off Illinois man who justified his refusal to do more around the house by saying, “As one of the people who runs one of the career centers I’ve been to told me: ‘You’re out of a job, but it’s not your time to paint the house and fix the car. Your job is about finding the next job.’ ”
At the kinky extreme, laid-off white-collar people are advised to further simulate the office environment by finding someone to play the part of a “boss” — a spouse, a friend, a paid career coach — to whom you report every few days on your progress.
Is it any wonder there’s no time left over for lobbying for universal health insurance or reading Marxist tracts on the “reserve army of the unemployed”? It’s all a person can do to keep up with the relentless pressures of an imaginary job.
The blue-collar unemployed are subjected to gerbil-like exercises of their own. While white-collar layoff victims are encouraged to polish the “brand called you,” blue-collar people are told they have nothing to offer unless they start all over with “retraining.” Hence, in part, the current surge in community college enrollments.
But in his 2006 book, “The Disposable American: Layoffs and Their Consequences,” Louis Uchitelle raised the obvious question: “Retraining for what?” At the beginning of the decade, computer skills were all the rage; then the low-level computer work vanished to India. Air-conditioner repairing is popular right now, and big-rig truck driving is a perennial favorite. There are no guarantees, of course, of eventual jobs. In a recent report for the organization Food AND Medicine on laid-off manufacturing workers in Maine, Steve Husson, who himself had been laid off as a DHL driver, found paper mill workers stuck with intermittent seasonal work and low-paid service-sector jobs despite their stints of retraining.
Even two or three years ago, when the economy was apparently healthy, average layoff victims “landed” in new jobs paying 17% less than the old ones — if they landed at all. Today, with the country losing more than half a million jobs a month, both white-collar job searching and blue-collar retraining are becoming surreal exercises in futility. No matter how smart you are — how flexible, personable and skilled — you can’t find a job that isn’t there. At least until the unemployment benefits run out and the credit cards are canceled, you might as well devote yourself to Madden and “Minesweeper.”
Of course, there are a few constructive, work-like alternatives. You could join one of the emerging efforts to organize the unemployed, like Food AND Medicine in Maine, the Unemployed and Anxiously Employed Workers’ Assn. of Allen County, Ind., or the nationwide group United Professionals, which I helped start. Or you could pitch in with one of the several organizations fighting for single-payer health insurance, or at least a huge expansion of public health insurance for the unemployed. You could get together with laid-off friends and co-workers to discuss how you would design an economy that made use of people’s precious skills instead of periodically tossing them out like so much trash.
But the first step, as in any 12-step program, is to overcome denial. Job searching is not a job; retraining is not a panacea. You may be poorer than you’ve ever been, but you are also freer — to express anger and urgency, to dream and create, to get together with others and conspire to build a better world.
Tags: Food AND Medicine, Louis Uchitelle, The-Disposable-American, Time Out, Tokyo Sonata, transition industry, Unemployed and Anxiously Employed Workers Association

May 6th, 2009 at 1:36 pm
What did you expect? The corporations don’t want the masses to figure out that if they organize, they could challenge their power. If they get you to buy into the “unemployment as job” meme, they’ve rendered you powerless.
When I was out of work, I job searched. I also worked on our house in case the worst happened and we had to sell it. I took time to do things for stress-relief and relax a little. I also did some extra volunteer work for my local dog-breed rescue. I also spent time writing my representatives about various issues, including how unemployment is handled in the US.
There’s only so much you can do on a job search. Diminishing returns affect job searches, just like most other things in life.
May 9th, 2009 at 6:11 pm
It’s the nuspeak of the 21st century. Orwell wouldn’t be at all surprise.
Ladies & Gentleman … We’ve been conned. Yep, the Madision Avenue spin doctors convinced too many (though not all ) of us that debt was good, things meant success, ethics are situational and getting fired / laid off wasn’t personal. AS I told one interviewer “what could be more personal than losing your income, health insurance, pension, and sense of self. Because in this county we are what we do.
Companies take and take from employees, draining them like fiscal vampires until their too exhausted to put up a fight.
Between spin and unrelenting work pressure people just forgot what it took to get what they had and didn’t know how to stop it slipping away.
May 12th, 2009 at 8:16 am
Bravo! You have correctly defined the reality of today’s job market. I have been going to all the job fairs locally for 5 months now and the “Job Recovery” groups at the various churches in the area where you sit around and exchange fake business cards with other unemployed people and call it “networking”.. The only common denominator is that these were once productive, professionals (demographic is obviously 40-60 years of age)now basically “purged” from Corporations in order to help their bottom line.
May 12th, 2009 at 12:23 pm
Bravo Barbara! And Robert, I agree with you, but the demographic of professionals at career management services and mass job fairs includes plenty of 30-somethings as well. Of the 9 classmates I was friends with in my engineering class about 10 years ago, 5 of us had our jobs outsourced to India, China, and the Czech Republic to “reduce global costs.” Uhuh, while the CEO buys his second yacht for his 3rd wife? We worked hard to become mid-to-senior level engineers, and now we are jobless. Soon even our managers roles will be outsourced. Some of us are still paying school loans. What training do we get now? How do I market “the brand called me” to companies that aren’t hiring? Our American Dream is over, and if you ask an executive, who had daddy pay for his ivy-league education and barely earned C-’s, he’d say we never deserved it in the first place.
May 12th, 2009 at 12:23 pm
I’m experiencing this right now. So much of the work searching for work is fruitless: the endless refactoring of your resume, constantly playing keyword bingo on the job search engines, filling out on-line applications on corporate job sites that have obviously not been tested on all (or any) browsers (which is always interesting because the ecommerce pages of the same site seem work flawlessly, hmmmmm), tossing your hat in the massive rings on eguru.com and elance.com were you get to compete with freelancers (in India and China) who charge 75% less than you can, handling calls and emails from (knuckle)headhunters about jobs that are not even marginally related to your background, joining job clubs (cults?) that require that you attend every useless meeting, filling out petitions and writing letters to the editor, etc. It all seems designed to keep you busy and out of circulation.
Barbara didn’t mention that many of the suicide bombers are young, unemployed technical and engineering students…the sidelining of workers is costing lives. We need to have a discussion about full employment.